The Reminiscences of an Irish Land Agent

S.M. Hussey
Reminiscences of an Irish Land Agent, The

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Title: The Reminiscences of an Irish Land Agent
Author: S.M. Hussey
Editor: Home Gordon
Release Date: August 5, 2005 [EBook #16450]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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[Illustration: S.M. Hussey]
THE REMINISCENCES
OF AN
IRISH LAND AGENT
BEING THOSE OF
S.M. HUSSEY
Compiled by HOME GORDON
WITH TWO PORTRAITS
LONDON
DUCKWORTH AND COMPANY 3 HENRIETTA STREET, W.C.
1904
Edinburgh: T. and A. CONSTABLE, Printers to His Majesty

PREFACE
Probably the first criticism on this book will be that it is colloquial.
The reason for this lies in the fact that though Mr. Hussey has for two generations been one of the most noted raconteurs in Ireland, he has never been addicted to writing, and for that reason has always declined to arrange his memoirs, though several times approached by publishers and strongly urged to do so by his friends, notably Mr. Froude and Mr. John Bright. If his reminiscences are to be at all characteristic they must be conversational, and it is as a talker that he himself at length consents to appear in print.
In this volume he endeavours to supply some view of his own country as it has impressed itself on 'the most abused man in Ireland,' as Lord James of Hereford characterised Mr. Hussey. How little practical effect several attacks on his life and scores of threatening letters have had on him is shown by the fact that he survives at the age of eighty to express the wish that his recollections may open the eyes of many as well as prove diverting.
Possessing a retentive memory, he has been further able to assist me with seven large volumes of newspaper cuttings which he had collected since 1853, while the publishers kindly permit the use of two articles he contributed to _Murray's Magazine_ in May and July 1887. To me the preparation of this book has been a delightful task, materially helped by Mr. Hussey's family as well as by a few others on either side of the Channel.
HOME GORDON.
13 OVINGTON SQUARE, S.W.

CONTENTS
PREFACE v
CHAP. I. ANCESTRY i
II. PARENTAGE AND EARLY YEARS 10
III. EDUCATION 20
IV. FARMING 30
V. LAND AGENT IN CORK 38
VI. FAMINE AND FEVER 50
VII. FENIANISM 60
VIII. MYSELF, SOME FACTS, AND MANY STORIES 71
IX. THE HARENC ESTATE 82
X. KERRY ELECTIONS 93
XI. DRINK 101
XII. PRIESTS 115
XIII. CONSTABULARY AND DISPENSARY DOCTORS 127
XIV. IRISH CHARACTERISTICS 140
XV. LORD-LIEUTENANTS AND CHIEF SECRETARIES 162
XVI. GLADSTONIAN LEGISLATION 179
XVII. THE STATE OF KERRY 194
XVIII. A GLANCE AT MY STEWARDSHIP 202
XIX. MURDER, OUTRAGE, AND CRIME 212
XX. THE EDENBURN OUTRAGE 235
XXI. MORE ATROCITIES AND LAND CRIMES 248
XXII. COMMISSIONS 268
XXIII. LATER DAYS 281
INDEX 305

ILLUSTRATIONS
PORTRAIT OF S.M. HUSSEY frontispiece PORTRAIT OF MRS. HUSSEY _at p. 71_

REMINISCENCES OF AN IRISH LAND AGENT
CHAPTER I
ANCESTRY
'My father and mother were both Kerry men,' as the saying goes in my native land, and better never stepped.
It was my misfortune, but not my fault, that I was born at Bath and not in Kerry.
However, my earliest recollection is of Dingle, for I was only three months old when I was taken back to Ireland, and up to that time I did not study the English question very deeply, especially as I had an Irish nurse.
There is a lot of Hussey history before I was born, and some is worth preserving here.
It is a thousand pities that so many details of family history have been lost, and to my mind it is incumbent on one member of every reasonably old family in this generation to collect and set down what should be remembered about their ancestors for the unborn to come.
My contribution does not profess to be very exhaustive, but it will serve for want of a better.
When a man claims to be descended from Irish kings, it generally means that his forbears were bigger scoundrels than he is, for they were cattle-lifters and marauders, whilst his depredations are probably disguised under some of the many insidious forms of finance. Just as every Scotsman is not canny and every American is not cute, so every Irishman is not what the Saxon believes him to be. But there can be little doubt what type of men these ancient Irish sovereigns were, and I regretfully confess I cannot trace my descent from them.
The family of Hussey was of English extraction, according to that rather valuable book The Antient and Present State of the County of Kerry, by Charles Smith, 1756--the companion volumes dealing with Cork and Waterford are much less precious. Personally I always
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